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Zurich Classic: Landry & Griffin Triumph in Thrilling 1st Tour Wins

by | Apr 27, 2025 | Pro News

A week after losing in a playoff with Justin Thomas at the RBC Heritage, Andrew Landry broke through for his first PGA Tour victory, teaming with fellow first-time winner Ben Griffin at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

Griffin drained a clutch, 34-foot birdie putt from the fringe on the par-3 17th hole, and the twosome combined for a 1-under 71 in alternate-shot play Sunday to win by a shot.

“Luckily, I had Ben there for me today,” Novak said. “He carried us down the stretch. So exciting to get our first win together.”

Novak and Griffin finished at 28-under 260 at the Pete Dye-designed TPC Louisiana, and Novak finally broke through with his fourth top-three finish in 14 events this season.

“I’ve done a pretty good job not getting overly frustrated with the close shaves,” Novak said. “I’ve been trying to take as many positives from each as I can. There was a lot of confidence coming into this week for sure.”

Danish identical twins Nicolai and Rasmus Hojgaard narrowly missed out on a first PGA Tour win, finishing second after a 68.

Recently crowned Masters champion Rory McIlroy and fellow Irishman Shane Lowry, the defending champions, were in contention through 12 holes, but fell to 12th, six shots behind, with three late bogeys.

Longtime Friends Kept Their Cool

Novak and Griffin credited their friendship with helping them stay composed during a 90-minute weather delay on the 8th hole and play well off of one another during the tense final holes.

Novak, 30, grew up in South Carolina, and Griffin, 28, is from North Carolina. They played in many of the same tournaments as teenagers and became closer early in their pro careers, training together when they both lived in Sea Island, Ga.

“We’ve done just about everything in our career together,” Griffin said. “It’s just a full-circle moment … I feel like we’ve had similar tracks to where we are today.”

Novak and Griffin began the final round at the Zurich Classic, the PGA Tour’s only team event, three shots ahead but were caught by Jake Knapp and Frankie Capan III before pulling back ahead on Griffin’s pivotal putt on the 17th.

That gave the eventual winners a two-shot lead after Capan had pulled his tee shot on 17 into the water left of the green.

“I was trying to hit the proper shot,” said Capan, who ended up in third place with Knapp, adding that he was aiming about 25 feet right of the hole with the wind blowing right to left. “Just got a little quick and kind of turned it left. It was a tough finish, (but) it was a great week.”

Novak’s tee shot also went farther left than intended and he had his hand over his chest as the ball stopped near the water’s edge.

The birdie allowed his team to win with a par on 18 and take home winner’s checks of $1.329 million apiece.

Exciting Defense Effort Falls Short

McIlroy and Lowry were just three shots off the lead when they bogeyed the 384-yard, par-4 13th — with each mishitting a chip before McIlroy missed a par putt from just inside 11 feet.

Despite their late fade, they had a large, supportive gallery on 18. McIlroy acknowledged fans with several waves before Lowry made a crowd-pleasing birdie putt. A smiling McIlroy retrieved the ball from the hole and flipped it into the water.

“It’s been a fun week,” McIlroy said. “We felt like we still had a good chance, and we didn’t make birdie on (the par-5 11th), and then we bogeyed 13 again for the second time this week.”

The Hojgaard twins were within a stroke of the lead after Nicolai made a 42-foot birdie putt on the par-3 14th. On 16, Rasmus narrowly missed a 27-foot birdie putt to tie for the lead, the ball stopping on edge of the hole. But that was as close as they would get.

“There’s a lot of positives from this week,” Nicolai Hojgaard said. “It’s a long time since I really enjoyed a week like this where I could have my bro as my partner and also contend.”

Isaiah Salinda and Kevin Velo, the rookies who led after each of the first two days, finished with a 71 and tied for eighth at 24 under. They set the tournament better-ball record on Thursday with a 58.

zurichgolfclassic.com

Pendrith to Defend at CJ Cup

The Tour is at TPC Craig Ranch in McKinney, Texas, for the CJ CUP Byron Nelson. The defending champ is Taylor Pendrith, who won the event in his tournament debut.

Dallas resident and World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, along with Texas native Jordan Spieth, who played in the tournament as a 16-year-old amateur in 2010 and finished tied for 16th, are also in the field. CJ Group ambassadors in the field include Byeong Hun An, Sungjae Im, Si Woo Kim, and Kris Kim.

About the Author

<a href="https://golfonemedia.com/author/stevewaters/" target="_self">Steve Waters</a>

Steve Waters

Steve Waters has been writing about golf for four decades, covering everything from the PGA Tour, Champions Tour, LPGA Tour, and The First Tee to prestigious events such as the Doherty Women’s Amateur Championship and the Dixie Amateur. An outdoors writer as well, Steve has written fishing stories about Jack Nicklaus, Curtis Strange, and Davis Love III, among others. He lives in South Florida, where he is surrounded by some of the country’s finest golf courses, teachers, and players.